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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 15 page report discusses the fact that, currently, JPEG is still the most common way of storing and exchanging still-photograph image information. However, fractal compression, wavelets, progressive decompression, bandwidth availability, are considerations, as is the ultimate application of the various image compression tools. The best compression techniques all lessen overall storage density and transmission bandwidth for still and video images, both within a system and between systems. Therefore, new solutions are being (and have been) actively sought. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWimage.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
presented in a way that no other media ever has. As a result, the richly dimensional experience of tactile, spatial sensory experiences whose contribution to cognitive processes is only recently
beginning to be understood, especially in relationship to Internet site design and interactive media. One of the greatest strengths of such imagery is its contribution to nothing less than
original, individual thought and expression. However, there has been a great deal of concern relating to the time required to upload a web page.
Highly visual representations are only a mouse click away from being passed over in virtually (pun intended) any type of discipline or area of study. Advertisers, educators, academicians, as
well as the new scientists and developers of Internet technology are concerned with the means by which images are compressed and decompressed the most efficiently in order to assure that
a web site is truly the most user-friendly and the least "user-frustrating." Fractal compression, progressive decompression, bandwidth availability, are considerations, as
is the ultimate application of the tools presented. However, the point must be made that the ability to more accurately compress information logically leads to the greater ability to transmit,
distribute, and expand upon a broad range of disciplines of human knowledge and understanding. Nonetheless, viewing some homepages on the World
Wide Web continues to be a painfully slow process even with a high-speed connection: While image files pour avalanches of bytes into an individual computers memory, the page only grows
line by tedious line on the computer monitor. The Most "Common" Compression Process Today, JPEG is still the most common way of
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